1 Unit Lessons for life Opener 1
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Life 2E Advanced Teacher\'s Book Unit 1
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Unit 1 Lessons for life Unit 1 Lessons for life Vocabulary notes 1 It’s seen better days is a good example of English understatement – it’s generally used to describe something in very bad condition. Shakespeare used it in the play As You Like It to refer to people who were poorer than in the past. 2 In Shakespeare’s play The Merry Wives of Windsor, the comedy character Pistol says ‘The world is my oyster’ to mean ‘I will use force to open the oyster’ (i.e. to get access to the world’s wealth and luxury). An oyster is a shellfish you have to force open to gain access to the delicious food inside. Today, the expression has a softer meaning – it means ‘I am free to do whatever I wish in the world’. 3 A ‘wild goose chase’ was a type of sixteenth-century race in which horses followed a lead horse at a set distance, mimicking wild geese flying in formation. Shakespeare used it in Romeo and Juliet, but it only came to mean a hopeless quest at a later date. 4 Emilia, Desdemona’s maid in Othello, uses ‘neither here nor there’ to mean something is not important – it has the same meaning today. 5 Said by Othello, ‘a foregone conclusion’ has the same meaning today – something that has an obvious and inevitable end which is known in advance. 6 In the Merchant of Venice, Jessica says, ‘love is blind and lovers cannot see the pretty follies that themselves commit’. Shakespeare used the phrase in other plays too. 7 Used by a character in The Taming of the Shrew, Shakespeare uses the phrase ‘break the ice’ to mean to win people over to your favour. Its modern use – to help people get to know and talk to each other – came much later. Download 0.8 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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